A display controller having only three color channels per pixel is used to control a display system having four or more color channels. Mapping of the possible luminance values for each color channel of each pixel to the 2n intervals represented by the n bits in each color channel are provided according to a function that is based on human color perception, so as not to generate artifacts.
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1. A method for driving a display unit having more than three color channels per pixel, comprising:
mapping a desired color to a set of luminance values, each luminance value being provided for a corresponding one of the color channels;
transforming the luminance values to intermediate values at a first resolution that has a limited resolution compared to a resolution of drive values required for driving the color channels of the display unit according to transformation functions selected based on a model for human color perception response that is non-linear over the range of the luminance values, wherein one or more of the transformation functions is non-linear to provide different amounts of changes in the intermediate values per unit change in the luminance value at different values of the luminance values; and
transmitting the intermediate values over the transmission medium to the display unit having more than three color channels as if the intermediate values are a sequence of pixel values for driving a display having fewer color channels at the first resolution, wherein the intermediate values are received by a receiver capable of recovering and providing the luminance values for the more than three color channels to the display unit.
10. A method for driving a display unit having more than three color channels per pixel, comprising:
receiving from a transmission medium by the display unit having more than three color channels a stream of intermediate values quantized to a first resolution as if the intermediate values are a sequence of pixel values for driving a display having fewer color channels, wherein the first resolution has a limited resolution compared to a resolution of drive values required for driving the color channels of the display unit, each intermediate value being a result of transforming one or more luminance values of corresponding color channels to the first resolution according to transformation functions selected based on a model for human color perception response that is non-linear over the range of the luminance values, wherein one or more of the transformation functions is non-linear to map to different amounts of changes in the intermediate values per unit change in the luminance value at different values of the luminance values;
recovering from the intermediate values a set of recovered luminance values, each recovered luminance value being provided for a corresponding one of the more than three color channels; and
providing the recovered luminance values to the display unit.
27. A driver for driving a display unit having more than three color channels per pixel, comprising a processor and a memory coupled to the processor, wherein the memory stores instructions that when executed by the processor cause the driver to:
receive from a transmission medium by the display unit having more than three color channels a stream of intermediate values quantized to a first resolution as if the intermediate values are a sequence of pixel values for driving a display having fewer color channels, wherein the first resolution has a limited resolution compared to a resolution of drive values required for driving the color channels of the display unit, the intermediate values resulting from transforming luminance values of the color channels to the first resolution according to transformation functions selected based on a model for human color perception response that is non-linear over the range of the luminance values, wherein one or more of the transformation functions is non-linear to map to different amounts of changes in the intermediate values per unit change in the luminance value at different values of the luminance values;
recover from the intermediate values a set of recovered luminance values, each recovered luminance value being provided for a corresponding one of the more than three color channels; and
provide the recovered luminance values to the display unit.
18. A data source for driving a display unit having more than three color channels per pixel, comprising a processor and a memory coupled to the processor, wherein the memory stores instructions that when executed by the processor cause the data source to:
map a desired color to a set of luminance values, each luminance value being provided for a corresponding one of the color channels;
transform the luminance values to intermediate values at a first resolution that has a limited resolution compared to a resolution of drive values required for driving the color channels of the display unit according to transformation functions selected based on a model for human color perception response that is non-linear over the range of the luminance values, wherein one or more of the transformation functions is non-linear to map to different amounts of changes in the intermediate values per unit change in the luminance value at different values of the luminance values; and
transmit the intermediate values over the transmission medium to the display unit having more than three color channels as if the intermediate values are a sequence of pixel values for driving a display having fewer color channels at the first resolution, wherein the intermediate values are received by a receiver capable of recovering and providing corresponding luminance values for the more than three color channels to the display unit.
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where C, x0 and α are parameters of the model, with β and γ selected such that U(x) and its first derivative are both continuous at x=x0.
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where C, x0 and α are parameters of the model, with β and γ selected such that U(x) and its first derivative are both continuous at x=x0.
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where C, x0 and α are parameters of the model, with β and γ selected such that U(x) and its first derivative are both continuous at x=x0.
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where C, x0 and α are parameters of the model, with β and γ selected such that U(x) and its first derivative are both continuous at x=x0.
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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for transmitting video data intended for an light emitting diode (LED) display unit having LEDs of four or more color channels, using a conventional LED display controller having only three color channels.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
LEDs are used to form the picture elements (“pixels”) that display the images shown on modern advertising structures, such as electronic signboards. In a typical electronic signboard, each pixel is formed by three or more separately controlled basis colors (“color channels”), with each color channel of the pixel being implemented by several LEDs. The LEDs in a color channel may be serially connected. Therefore, the LEDs deployed to produce the multicolored images number in from hundreds of thousands to millions. By properly controlling the intensity of light emitted from each color channel, it is possible to produce light of a wide variety of colors and intensities at each pixel.
In a conventional LED, the emitted light intensity at any time is a function of the average electrical current through the LED over a short time period immediately before that instance in time. Any possible color and brightness can be achieved by precise adjustment of the average current in each color channel.
To display an image, digital data specifying the intensities of the color channels of each pixel is downloaded from a data source to the electronic signboard. The downloaded digital data is usually temporarily stored in a display controller or “player,” which repetitively plays the data on the electronic signboard in the form of a sequence of images.
Until recently, electronic signboards are formed by pixels having only three color channels. Thus, most commercially available players for such an electronic signboard support only three color channels per pixel and, most often, each color channel is specified by 8 bits. Therefore, to support more than three color channels, the downloaded digital data are typically played using a multiplexing technique. However, in such a player, as each color channel is limited to eight bits, the bits are carefully allocated to avoid introducing artifacts in the resulting image displayed on the electronic signboard.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a display controller having only three color channels per pixel, with each color channel having a limited resolution of n bits, is used to control a display system having four or more color channels. Mapping of the possible luminance values for each color channel of each pixel to the 2n intervals represented by the n bits in each color channel is provided according to a function that is based on human color perception, so as not to generate artifacts.
The present invention is better understood upon consideration of the drawings in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
A method according to the present invention takes advantage of one or more analytical models of the relation between tristimulus values1 and what is perceived by the human observer. The method also limits any error in transmission over the limited color channels of a conventional 3-color 8-bit channel player to less than that perceptible by the human observer. A “uniform color space” (e.g., CIE L*a*b* color space) provides a way to quantify the perceived error. In this detailed description, the CIE L*a*b* color space is used for convenience, but other uniform color spaces may be used within the scope of the method. The present invention is not limited by any particular color representation, and may in fact be carried out using any suitable color representation. For example, instead of CIE L*a*b* color space, the CIE L*u*v* color space may also be used. 1The tristimulus value refers to the representation of a color using three numerical values. One example of a tristimulus value is the “uniform color space” CIE L*a*b* color space representation, which is well-known to those skilled in the art. Under that representation, for example, the tristimulus value is specified by one luminance value and two chrominance values. See, for example, Gunter Wyszecki and W. S. Stiles, Color Science Concepts and Methods, Quantitative Data and Formulae, 2nd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York (1982), pp. 130-248, esp. 137-142, 166-168, for a discussion of the CIE colorimetric system. The CIE L*a*b* “uniform color space” is widely used to evaluate color and luminance differences.
Transformations 104-1 to 104-N may be realized in many different ways (e.g., in software, hardware or by a look-up table), the intermediate values are quantized by q-bit quantizations 105-1 to 105-N to the specified resolution of q bits supported by the color channels. In this example, for use in a conventional 3-color play, q-bit is 8-bits. Note that, in some implementations, the transformation and quantization steps may be combined. For example, in a look-up table implementation, the output values of mapper 102 may be used to access a memory location containing the corresponding quantized intermediate values (e.g., TIFF Lab format values), without a separate quantization step.
The quantized intermediate values 106-1 to 106-2 are transmitted by the conventional player as a sequence of 8-bit words over its 3 color channels, as if it is a sequence of conventional pixel values suitable for driving a convention 3-color display unit. The transmitted 8-bit words may include, in addition to the quantized intermediate values, other parameter values that may be suitably utilized at the display unit, if desired.
At the display unit, the transmitted values 106-1 to 106-N are received by the display unit and the output values 103-1 to 103-N are recovered using inverse transformations (U) 107-1 to 107-N. Inverse transformations 107-1 to 107-N need not be mathematically exact inverse functions of transformations 104-1 to 104-N, suitable inverse functions need only recover the output values to within acceptable error bounds (“approximate inverse function”). Like transformations 104-1 to 104-N, inverse transformation 107-1 to 107-N may be realized in many different ways (e.g., in software, hardware or by a look-up table). The output values of inverse transformations 107-1 to 107-N are then quantized by r-bit quantizations 108-1 to 108-N—r bits being the expected resolution of the LED drive electronics—and provided to the LED drive electronics at the expected resolution. In this example, the value of r may be, for example, 16. As shown in
Transformations 104-1 to 104-N and inverse transformation 107-1 to 107-N are designed to take advantage that human color perception response for a given color is non-linear over the wide range of expected luminance. For example, the following inverse transformation (U) allows a greater change in luminance per unit change at the greater quantized intermediate values, and a lesser change in luminance per unit change at the lesser quantized intermediate values:
Where C, x0 and α are model parameters, with β and γ selected such that U(x) and its first derivative are both continuous at x=x0. One solution provides β=(α−1)x0 and γ=Cααx0α−1. If it is desired that U(xmax)=Umax, then
The corresponding transformation T(x) may be derived by inverting inverse transformation U(x).
The above detailed description is provided to illustrate specific embodiments of the present invention and is not intended to be limiting. Numerous variations and modifications within the scope of the present invention are possible. For example, although the detailed description above provides that each transformation function operates on a single output value of mapper 102, the present invention is not so limited. A transformation function that maps more than one output value of mapper 102 may also be possible. Further, any of the input or output values of the transformation functions or inverse transformation functions need not be a binary value. Such values may be represented using a multi-level digital representation or an analog representation. The present invention is set forth in the accompanying claims.
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